mangini brings up a good point
when brad smith was injected to run some snaps it was fairly seamless
but here comes tebow and its a fire drill

is tebow too mentally challenged to operate the offense?
wtf could be going on

I think there is a lot to say about it and I don't know how each of these points factor into it, but:

1-Our Line sucks and the formation generally requires good line play.
2-It is designed to be a running formation like 90% of the time and Smith was much more flexible in what he thought of himself as. He wasn't too delusiona...confidant to just love to play...er...he...Tebow doesn't love the game as much as he loves his ego so he wants to pretend like jumping in the air and hurling a ball down at someone looks like this:

3-The Wildcat doesn't really work for most anyone these days.
4-The Jets are never prepared, much less prepared to use novelty plays they run once a game.

Mangini and, surprisingly, Stephen A. Smith both talk sense in that segment. If the coaching staff are unwilling to switch from Sanchez to Tebow, Tannenbaum really needs to be pressed about what he saw in the latter. Rex certainly hasn't helped himself - he's acted like a deer in the headlights in the face of the adversity we have come up against this season. It's a question of who the owner trusts more though when it comes to whose job - the head coach or the GM - is most likely in jeopardy.

Mangini and, surprisingly, Stephen A. Smith both talk sense in that segment. If the coaching staff are unwilling to switch from Sanchez to Tebow, Tannenbaum really needs to be pressed about what he saw in the latter. Rex certainly hasn't helped himself - he's acted like a deer in the headlights in the face of the adversity we have come up against this season. It's a question of who the owner trusts more though when it comes to whose job - the head coach or the GM - is most likely in jeopardy.

Agreed Mangini and Stephen A did a good job. Pretty good segment overall.